Author Topic: Weekend Update 9/17/17  (Read 6216 times)

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GhengisKong

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #15 on: September 16, 2017, 11:14:35 AM »
+1

A preview of the NEAR finished product. I am still trying to nail down some wiring 'crosstalk' with the nose LED and the stock digitrax circuit board LED. I plan to use this unit as a Rock Island delivery or "borrowed" power at shows with my nTrak club.

tehachapifan

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #16 on: September 16, 2017, 01:40:55 PM »
0

A preview of the NEAR finished product. I am still trying to nail down some wiring 'crosstalk' with the nose LED and the stock digitrax circuit board LED. I plan to use this unit as a Rock Island delivery or "borrowed" power at shows with my nTrak club.

Looks great! :o With all the SP models I've done, I am yet to illuminate the red UDE light on any of them (HO or N). I think I'm going to have to start doing that. ;)

Dave V

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #17 on: September 16, 2017, 05:59:29 PM »
+6
Built a Model Railroad General Store kit for RGS caboose 0404:

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Ntrainz1

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #18 on: September 16, 2017, 05:59:44 PM »
+4
adding some scenery and details






Bob.

milw12

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #19 on: September 16, 2017, 06:07:40 PM »
+1
Recently, I've changed prototype locales, now the Milwaukee in Kansas City, started on a MILW GP20, and have been working on some scenery on the layout:



And to top it off, today I found some books and goodies I've been searching at the TCMRRM show, which is always a nice one.

Typed out like that it seems like I've been a lot busier than I have been. This is about three or four weeks rolled into one  :D

More details in the respective threads, and nice work by everyone this week as well.

Thanks for looking!
Lucas

u18b

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #20 on: September 16, 2017, 09:36:01 PM »
+7
A Tractive Power Corporation employee is doing a last minute check as the TP70 is on its way to be delivered to the Plywood Plains RR.

General Mgr Ron Bearden said his team was looking forward to the acquisition.



Ron Bearden
CSX N scale Archivist
http://u18b.com

"All get what they want-- not all like what they get."  Aslan the Lion in the Chronicles of Narnia by C.S.Lewis.

bbussey

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #21 on: September 16, 2017, 10:39:59 PM »
+1
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I printed a New Haven flanger that I designed eons ago where desire did not exceed pricepoint until Shapeways revamped its ProJet pricing structure. It could stand some improvements but I can work with the current iteration.
Bryan Busséy
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NSE #1117
www.bbussey.net


bbussey

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #22 on: September 16, 2017, 10:52:22 PM »
+1
I also got back to work on the EP-3. The mechanism is done and wired. The brass full body wrapper was proving too difficult to get correct so I redesigned the core and the wrapper so that the basic roof with rivet detail is now part of the core and the wrapper is now just the sides and ends. I also added details I had forgotten previously such as the brackets to hold the light boards in place. The freestanding roof-mounted headlights with 0403 LEDs will be wired to the light boards and the springs will make contact with the board when the body shell snaps in place. In theory.

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chuck geiger

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #23 on: September 17, 2017, 06:05:25 PM »
+1
Planning a switching layout (if) Juneau had rail service. Would be a line from the marine terminal with barge service
from Seattle to Juneau and then a short line from the marine terminal to Lemon Creek (Alaska Brewing Company) and
other industries to be determined. JSL (Juneau Short Line) is the working title. Also talked with Mac who use to have
a store here, now in Roseburg, OR to see what other modelers are around here to super-size this and make it a club
project. I.e. TAKU RIVER RAILROAD, which was a planned line to connect British Columbia with Juneau that never
transpired due to White Pass and Yukon Route project. http://www.macstracksrailroading.com/
http://www.juneau.org/parkrec/museum/forms/digitalbob/readarticle.php?UID=231&newxtkey
https://www.google.com/maps/@58.2959459,-134.4117465,2909m/data=!3m1!1e3

A road from Taku Inlet to Atlin, proposed by the Atlin Chamber of Commerce in 1905, wasn't even surveyed, but in 1913 and 1914 there was another proposal, this time not for a wagon road but for a railroad, one that would reach not only Atlin but would hook up with a transcontinental rail line.

George W. Mitchell, a Canadian who had been connected with the British Columbia Development Association at the time of the building of the White Pass Railway, was the first to suggest a railroad from Taku Inlet. Mitchell seems to have had connections with English financiers, and some sources gave him credit for interesting the Close Bros. of London in the White Pass line.

Early in 1913 Mitchell enlisted as his local agent Percy Pond, a Juneau photographer who had been promoting communications links with Atlin ever since 1898. In that year he had headed a Juneau Chamber of Commerce party that made a reconnaissance survey for a trail to Atlin. In April, 1914, Pond was back in the Taku Valley, this time with a civil engineer, F.J. Wettrick, to make a preliminary survey for Mitchell's railroad.

According to a contemporary Juneau newspaper article, "At the boundary the railroad will connect with the line to Atlin and Lake Teslin, where it will connect with a line of river steamers." An unwary reader might have assumed from the story that trains were already running on the Atlin line. Actually, not a single rail had yet been laid.

There was more: "Another branch will run in a southerly direction to connect with the Grand Trunk Pacific. For the present the water terminus will be at Taku Inlet, but it is not improbable that eventually it will be built to Juneau. "The Grand Trunk Pacific was the transCanada rail line that had its western terminus at Prince Rupert.

Percy Pond was described by the newspaper as "a happy man," and he was running over with enthusiasm. "The construction of the line will open an immense trade territory to Juneau," he told the Chamber of Commerce. If anyone pointed out that although the territory was immense, its population was minute, it was overlooked by the newspapers.

About the time Percy Pond was tramping along the banks of the Taku with a surveyor's rod, in 1914, articles of incorporation were being flied both at Olympia, Washington, and in the office of Secretary of Alaska Charles E. Davidson at Juneau. Incorporators were Willis B. Herr, F.G. Bayley and Worral Wilson, all of Seattle, and the initial stock issue was to be for $300,000. Attorney W.S. Bayless was the Juneau legal agent.

The company's prospectus was considerably more modest than had been announced in 1913. It was simply "to build a railroad from Taku Inlet to the Canadian border to connect with the Atlin Railway Company's proposed line." G.W. Mitchell, the active head of the company, visited Juneau in July, 1914, while the Princess Sophia was in port. He was enroute to Atlin via Skagway. And that was the last word, so far as has been discovered, about a Taku River railroad.
« Last Edit: September 17, 2017, 06:07:59 PM by chuck geiger »
Chuck Geiger
provencountrypd@gmail.com



dougnelson

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #24 on: September 17, 2017, 08:42:30 PM »
0
Maybe you've seen this, but it never gets old:


fcnrwy23

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #25 on: September 17, 2017, 10:37:36 PM »
0
A Tractive Power Corporation employee is doing a last minute check as the TP70 is on its way to be delivered to the Plywood Plains RR.

General Mgr Ron Bearden said his team was looking forward to the acquisition.

SWEEEEET!!  :D

Jerry G.

mmagliaro

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #26 on: September 17, 2017, 11:31:18 PM »
0
I also got back to work on the EP-3. The mechanism is done and wired. The brass full body wrapper was proving too difficult to get correct so I redesigned the core and the wrapper so that the basic roof with rivet detail is now part of the core and the wrapper is now just the sides and ends. I also added details I had forgotten previously such as the brackets to hold the light boards in place. The freestanding roof-mounted headlights with 0403 LEDs will be wired to the light boards and the springs will make contact with the board when the body shell snaps in place. In theory.

(Attachment Link)

Bryan,
This project has been going on for quite a while, and I just wanted to say that I admire your diligence and your willingness to redesign assemblies and parts until you get it "right".   What you have done so far looks really excellent.

That little light board with spring contacts is very very elegant!  I dont' know what those springs are made of, but you might want to use phosphor bronze springs to assure better resiliance to oxidation.  They would be softer and still provide plenty of pressure for good contact, I would think.

bbussey

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #27 on: September 18, 2017, 12:01:13 AM »
+2
Bryan,
This project has been going on for quite a while, and I just wanted to say that I admire your diligence and your willingness to redesign assemblies and parts until you get it "right".   What you have done so far looks really excellent.

That little light board with spring contacts is very very elegant!  I dont' know what those springs are made of, but you might want to use phosphor bronze springs to assure better resiliance to oxidation.  They would be softer and still provide plenty of pressure for good contact, I would think.

Max,
It's the only way I will ever get an EP-3!  It's somewhat amazing that there have been as many New Haven specific models released commercially in N scale to date as there have been, with more to come. But seeing any of the electrics is extremely unlikely, so I have to go this route since I'm modeling the electrified zone.

Regarding the springs, @Point353 suggested to me an excellent and more reliable alternative in using sprung micro contacts available though Digi-Key, so I ordered the appropriate parts that fit with appropriate insulation within the spring housing dimensions in my current chassis. That should eliminate any further trial and error regarding the lighting. Hopefully that's the final hurdle.
« Last Edit: September 18, 2017, 12:04:06 AM by bbussey »
Bryan Busséy
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jereising

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #28 on: September 18, 2017, 08:12:34 AM »
+9
PTC comes to the Sub!  Been working on this through the summer, finally got it installed.

Here's the gear at CP Canyon:



And a similar setup at CP Bridge:



Caliente is a bit different - a larger tower was needed for communications, and you'll note satellite communication as well:



While working at Caliente I added a communication shack for replacement train crews and spruced up the area a bit:



More next week.
Jim Reising
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Santa Fe Guy

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Re: Weekend Update 9/17/17
« Reply #29 on: September 18, 2017, 07:49:19 PM »
0
Nice work Jim adds a lot to the look and feel of the RR.
Rod.
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